Preexisting pancreatic acinar cells contribute to acinar cell, but not islet β cell, regeneration
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 2 April 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 117 (4) , 971-977
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci29988
Abstract
It has been suggested that pancreatic acinar cells can serve as progenitors for pancreatic islets, a concept with substantial implications for therapeutic efforts to increase insulin-producing β cell mass in patients with diabetes. We report what we believe to be the first in vivo lineage tracing approach to determine the plasticity potential of pancreatic acinar cells. We developed an acinar cell–specific inducible Cre recombinase transgenic mouse, which, when mated with a reporter strain and pulsed with tamoxifen, resulted in permanent and specific labeling of acinar cells and their progeny. During various time periods of observation and using several models to provoke injury, we failed to observe any chase of the labeled cells into the endocrine compartment, indicating that acinar cells do not normally transdifferentiate into islet β cells in vivo in adult mice. In contrast, we observed a substantial role for replication of preexisting acinar cells in the regeneration of new acinar cells after partial pancreatectomy. These results indicate that mature acinar cells harbor a facultative acinar but not endocrine progenitor capacity.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Persistent expression of PDX-1 in the pancreas causes acinar-to-ductal metaplasia through Stat3 activationGenes & Development, 2006
- No Stem Cell Is an Islet (Yet)New England Journal of Medicine, 2006
- Pancreatic epithelial plasticity mediated by acinar cell transdifferentiation and generation of nestin-positive intermediatesDevelopment, 2005
- Advances in pancreatic islet transplantation in humansDiabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, 2005
- Pancreatic Islet TransplantationPLoS Medicine, 2004
- Adult pancreatic β-cells are formed by self-duplication rather than stem-cell differentiationNature, 2004
- Lectin as a marker for staining and purification of embryonic pancreatic epitheliumBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2002
- Endocrine/Exocrine Intermediate Cells in Streptozotocin-Treated Ins-IFN-γ Transgenic MicePancreas, 1997
- Betacellulin and activin A coordinately convert amylase-secreting pancreatic AR42J cells into insulin-secreting cells.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1996
- Cell lineage ablation in transgenic mice by cell-specific expression of a toxin geneCell, 1987